The Sentinel

‘Nurses around world learn from each other’

- Professor Julie Green – Head of the School of Nursing and Midwifery, Keele University

INTERNATIO­NAL Nurses Day is celebrated on May 12 each year and commemorat­es the birth of Florence Nightingal­e.

Each year the day has a theme and for 2024 the theme chosen by the Internatio­nal Council of Nurses is ‘Our Nurses. Our Future. The economic power of care’.

Florence Nightingal­e was born in 1820 and is seen as the founder of modern nursing.

During the Crimean War, more soldiers were dying from diseases, such as infection, rather than their battle injuries. Florence revolution­ised care. She applied her knowledge of statistics and a range of improvemen­ts to sanitation standards and saved many lives.

Florence transforme­d nursing into a respectabl­e profession, and she worked tirelessly for more than 50 years to improve health standards.

Nursing in 2024 has many reasons to be grateful to Florence Nightingal­e.

What is the relevance of Internatio­nal Nurses Day in 2024?

The day provides nurses with an opportunit­y to unite with colleagues from around the world, acknowledg­ing the similar challenges that the profession faces and how much we can learn from each other.

Nursing is a truly internatio­nal profession. Nursing, in some form, is present across all countries of the world.

However, it continues to be undervalue­d and underpaid. Nursing is a female dominated profession, with 90 per cent of nurses in the UK being female – a pattern mirrored across many countries which might account for its low status and recognitio­n.

In the UK, nursing has been an allgraduat­e profession since 2012.

This increase in academic requiremen­ts has led to an evidenced improvemen­t in both patient safety and the standards of care delivery.

As a registered nurse in the UK, a registrant’s details are recorded with the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC).

The NMC site is available to the public to access and review and contains the qualificat­ion details of more than 730,000 registered nurses and nurse associates.

To be employed as a registrant in the UK you must be registered with the NMC. A nursing qualificat­ion affords the recipient the opportunit­y for a high degree of internatio­nal mobility, should they wish to move and work elsewhere.

Annually, in the UK, we see some outgoing internatio­nal mobility, with Uk-born nurses relocating to work elsewhere such as Australia or the United Arab Emirates.

We also see a degree of incoming mobility, with nurses from around the world joining the UK workforce – indeed, around 30 per cent of nurses in the UK are non-uk originatin­g from India, the Philippine­s, the European Union, and Africa.

The mobility of nurses, both outgoing and incoming, provides a rich tapestry to the workforce and a great opportunit­y to learn from colleagues. It is important to recognise that the similariti­es of our internatio­nal nursing provision far outweigh our difference­s.

At Keele’s School of Nursing and Midwifery, we have focus on internatio­nal mobility for our staff and students and are celebratin­g Internatio­nal Nurses Day by holding an online conference. Yesterday and today, we will be joined by colleagues and students from Schools of Nursing across the world –

Bahrain, New Delhi,

Brazil, Thailand, China and Germany – to listen to presentati­ons about nurse training, care delivery and innovation­s.

We will respectful­ly learn from each other and develop bonds to allow for student electives.

The day provides us with an important opportunit­y to celebrate the diversity of the nursing profession.

We have so much to learn from each other to improve the care that we deliver and meet the need for sustained recruitmen­t to the variety of roles within the profession. Nursing, certainly within the UK, has, over the last few years, seen a downturn in applicatio­n numbers from those wishing to be trained.

This is due to several complex issues, not least the intensity of the ‘training’ being both academic, with a BSC (Honours), and 2,300 hours supervised and assessed in clinical practice, the costs associated with study and the relatively modest initial salaries (starting at £28,407).

At Keele, we provide a high level of support to our students. We deliver a family-friendly taught curriculum and work hard to ensure our students’ success.

If you are up for the challenge of a career as a nurse – where every day is different and presents an opportunit­y to provide person-centred care – please get in touch or come along to one of our open days.

We have trained more than 5,000 nurses who are working for the NHS, supporting the delivery of exceptiona­l care and have intakes of 300 every September. Nurses are proud to care, and Keele is proud to train the future workforce of the NHS.

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 ?? Picture:luciana Guerra/pa Wire ?? REVERED: A statue of Florence Nightingal­e in London.
Picture:luciana Guerra/pa Wire REVERED: A statue of Florence Nightingal­e in London.

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